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Methodological Issues in Literacy Research Across Languages: Evidence From Alphabetic Orthographies
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In: ISSN: 0034-0553 ; Reading Research Quarterly ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03351326 ; Reading Research Quarterly, International Reading Association, 2021, S1 (S1), pp.S351-S370. ⟨10.1002/rrq.407⟩ (2021)
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Handwriting Legibility and Its Relationship to Spelling Ability and Age: Evidence From Monolingual and Bilingual Children
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In: Front Psychol (2020)
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Learning to read and spell words in different writing systems
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Different patterns, but equivalent predictors, of growth in reading in consistent and inconsistent orthographies.
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In: Psychol Sci , 24 (8) 1398 - 1407. (2013) (2013)
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Abstract:
All alphabetic orthographies use letters in printed words to represent the phonemes in spoken words, but they differ in the consistency of the relationship between letters and phonemes. English appears to be the least consistent alphabetic orthography phonologically, and, consequently, children learn to read more slowly in English than in languages with more consistent orthographies. In this article, we report the first longitudinal evidence that the growth of reading skills is slower and follows a different trajectory in English than in two much more consistent orthographies (Spanish and Czech). Nevertheless, phoneme awareness, letter-sound knowledge, and rapid automatized naming measured at the onset of literacy instruction did not differ in importance as predictors of variations in reading development among the three languages. These findings suggest that although children may learn to read more rapidly in more consistent than in less consistent orthographies, there may nevertheless be universal cognitive prerequisites for learning to read in all alphabetic orthographies.
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Keyword:
Child; Child Development; cognitive development; educational psychology; Female; Humans; Language; Longitudinal Studies; Male; Phonetics; Preschool; reading
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URL: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1405422/
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Spatial Orienting of Attention in Dyslexic Adults using Directional and Alphabetic Cues
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Common Patterns of Prediction of Literacy Development in Different Alphabetic Orthographies
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Common Patterns of Prediction of Literacy Development in Different Alphabetic Orthographies
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In: PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE , 23 (6) 678 - 686. (2012) (2012)
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Common Patterns of Prediction of Literacy Development in Different Alphabetic Orthographies
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In: PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE , 23 (6) 678 - 686. (2012) (2012)
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Common patterns of prediction of literacy development in different alphabetic orthographies.
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In: Psychol Sci , 23 (6) pp. 678-686. (2012) (2012)
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Common Patterns of Prediction of Literacy Development in Different Alphabetic Orthographies
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A Cross-linguistic Database of Children’s Printed Words in Three Slavic Languages
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In: http://korpus.juls.savba.sk/attachments/publications/garabik-weslalex.pdf (2007)
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Smooth pursuit eye movements and phonological processing in adults with dyslexia.
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